Bryzgalov continues dominance of Kings

Defenseman Keith Ballard snapped a tie with 7:44 remaining in
the third period and Bryzgalov made 22 saves to remain perfect
against Los Angeles while with his new team as the Phoenix
Coyotes skated past the Kings, 4-2, on Saturday.

Mathias Tjarnqvist, Radim Vrbata and captain Shane Doan also
tallied and Fredrik Sjostrom collected three assists for the
Coyotes, who snapped a four-game road losing streak.

Since being claimed off waivers from Anaheim on November 17,
Bryzgalov has faced the Kings four times, winning each time
while allowing just four goals on 110 shots.

"It just happens," Bryzgalov said. "I don't think about my
record against any team. I step on the ice and try to play and
try to win the game."

"He's been great for us," Doan said. "The games where we've
needed him to be big, he's been big. It's awful nice having him
back there."

"I don't think we're sitting here thinking we have to beat
Bryzgalov. We're thinking we have to beat Phoenix," Johnson
said. "Obviously, he's been great for them. He's helped turn
them around. I don't think he's in our heads, though."

With Phoenix clinging to a 2-1 lead midway through the third,
Brian Willsie passed the puck in front of the net, where Kyle
Calder stopped it with his skate. Michal Handzus skated in
behind Calder and flipped it past Bryzgalov at 10:39, knotting
the contest.

The Coyotes regained the advantage less than two minutes later,
however, as Doan dished from behind the net to Ballard, who beat
goaltender Jean-Sebastien Aubin to the stick side with a wrist
shot from the slot for his third tally of the season and a 3-2
edge.

"It was a big shift after they scored," Doan said. "We wanted
to get something back. (Rookie Peter Mueller) made a big play
just to lay it deep to me, and (Ballard) pinches in and made a
good shot."

"You need your best player to come through in the clutch, and
Doan made a good play, got it to Ballard, and Ballard scored a
nice goal to put us back in the lead," Phoenix coach Wayne
Gretzky said. "It was a good statement for that group to come
out and get a big goal when we need it on the road."

Doan sealed the win with an empty-netter.

The victory helped the Coyotes kick off their six-game road trip
in good fashion. Phoenix now travels to the East Coast for
four contests before finishing the trek December 20 at San Jose.

"We wanted to make sure we won this one because we have a tough
road trip coming up, and it won't be easy," Vrbata said. "This
was a huge win for us."

Gretzky believed the game resembled that of old-time hockey.

"It was a hard game. It was more of an old-fashioned game," he
said. "There wasn't a lot of room. It was more bang-and-crash
hockey tonight.

"We got a little bit lucky, played hard. It was a hard game
tonight. It was kind of a scramble game, but it was a physical
game. After coming off a real hard game (Friday) night against
San Jose, a 1-0 loss that was a tough loss for us, to come in
here and put up the kind of effort we did, we're pretty happy
with our victory tonight."

Los Angeles coach Marc Crawford did not think his team received
its share of breaks.

"Usually for a hockey team, the breaks will even up over time if
you keep working hard," Crawford said. "I think we got a
hard-working effort tonight. We just didn't have enough skill
and poise with the puck at crucial times."

"It seems like we had a lot of chances, but we just couldn't put
it in the back of the net," added Kings center Anze Kopitar,
who scored his 13th goal of the season.

The Kings opened the scoring with a power-play goal at 6:24 of
the first that was credited to Kopitar.

Defenseman Lubomir Visnovsky fed Dustin Brown, who sent the puck
across the crease. Kopitar got a piece of it before it caromed
off the skate of Ballard, who was skating backwards, and into
the net.

The goal extended Kopitar's points streak to a career-high six
games, while the assist stretched Brown's run to eight contests
- also a career best.

Phoenix tied it with 90 seconds left in the opening session on
Tjarnqvist's first goal of the season. Blue-liner Ed Jovanovski
took a shot from the left point that went through traffic
before being deflected past Aubin by Tjarnqvist.

Vrbata put the Coyotes in front 69 seconds into the middle
period with a man-advantage tally. Rookie Martin Hanzal
backhanded a pass across the crease to Vrbata, who beat Aubin to
the glove side for his team-leading 11th goal of the season and
sixth in seven games.

"We missed that 5-on-3 (advantage) in the first and we wanted to
make sure we scored on the power play early in the second,"
Vrbata said. "It was a bouncing puck, and Marty got it on his
stick and slid it over, and I had an open net."

Aubin stopped 18 shots for the Kings, who have lost five of
their last seven contests.